Grandmaster Won's Taekwondo is a Korean martial arts school focused on WTF (World Taekwondo Federation) sparring style, serving children as young as four and adults through belt advancement toward black dan rank. Located on the city's north side, it operates as a traditional dojang (training hall) with a single-room setup rather than a multi-location chain, centering instruction around forms, board breaking, and controlled sparring.
This is a belt-rank school following the Kukkiwon (World Taekwondo Headquarters) system, which means students progress through colored belts toward first-degree black belt in a structured sequence. Grandmaster Won, the head instructor, holds credentials in both teaching and competitive taekwondo. The school emphasizes technique over contact intensity, making it distinct from combat-heavy kickboxing gyms or heavily contact-sparring-focused dojangs elsewhere in the city. Class sizes are kept small enough for individual form correction, and the curriculum includes poomse (forms), kicks, defensive postures, and board breaking at higher levels.
The school offers separate tracks for children (ages 4 to 12), teens (13 to 17), and adults (18+), though classes are mixed by skill level rather than age once a student has tested and placed in a rank. Monthly tuition runs $99 for a single class per week, $149 for two classes weekly, and $199 for unlimited classes, with a $50 enrollment fee due at signup. Testing fees (required to advance belt rank) typically cost $40 to $60 per test, depending on belt level; higher belts incur higher test costs because they involve more forms and sparring elements. No long-term contract is required; month-to-month enrollment is standard. Students usually test every two to three months, meaning a year of focused training at two classes per week costs roughly $900 to $1,300 total (tuition plus testing).
Trial classes are offered free, and the school often runs promotional offers during fall enrollment and the New Year.
Oklahoma City has at least two other established taekwondo schools. Victory Taekwondo, also on the north side, emphasizes Olympic-style sparring and hosts youth competition teams; it charges $120 to $170 monthly depending on frequency and tends to draw families focused on tournament preparation. Elite Martial Arts, in the central area, blends taekwondo, karate, and Brazilian jiu-jitsu under one roof, appealing to parents wanting multiple martial arts exposure; membership is $159 to $189 monthly for taekwondo alone.
Grandmaster Won's suits students prioritizing traditional Korean technique, single-discipline focus, and lower fees. It is the better choice if you want a small-group environment where the instructor knows every student's form details. Victory Taekwondo is the right fit if your child is interested in competing in state or regional tournaments; Elite is better if you want a younger student to sample multiple arts before committing to one.
Grandmaster Won's works well for families seeking a calm, technique-oriented first introduction to martial arts; young children who respond to small-class attention; and adults returning to fitness through structured, goal-oriented training. The school is not ideal for very young children (under 5) with short attention spans, for people seeking high-contact sparring, or for students who need extreme flexibility in class scheduling (the school offers set class times only, with no online or hybrid options).
You call or visit the school during business hours to schedule a free trial class. Bring loose, comfortable clothes (shorts and a t-shirt are fine initially); the school provides or sells white dobok (taekwondo uniform) once you enroll. During your first class, you will learn basic stances, simple kicks, and how to bow properly. The instructor will assess where you would place in the rank system; most beginners start at white belt. After class, you will discuss enrollment and receive a rank roadmap showing the belt sequence (typically 8 to 10 belts before black belt candidacy, each requiring a test).
The school operates Monday through Friday evenings (typically 4 p.m. to 8 p.m.) and Saturday mornings (9 a.m. to 12 p.m.), though specific times should be confirmed with the school before your first visit as schedules occasionally shift seasonally. Parking is available on site or nearby street parking. The dojang is a single large room with a padded floor, mirrors, and board-breaking equipment. There is no cafe or lounge; plan to arrive 10 minutes early to change into your uniform.
Grandmaster Won's fills a specific niche in Oklahoma City's martial arts landscape: serious, patient instruction in traditional taekwondo at accessible rates, without the overhead costs or tournament pressure of larger schools. It serves the student who values technique depth and personal attention over flash or speed of rank advancement.
